Ichimoku cloud explained: kumo, trend and signals
By Ken Chigbo, Founder, KenMacro. Published 2026-05-13.
Quick answer
The Ichimoku cloud is a Japanese trend system built from five plotted lines. The shaded area between Senkou Span A and Senkou Span B forms the kumo, or cloud, which acts as dynamic support and resistance. Price above the cloud signals an uptrend, price below signals a downtrend, and price inside signals consolidation.
What is Ichimoku cloud?
Ichimoku Kinko Hyo, often shortened to Ichimoku cloud, is a multi component charting system developed by Japanese journalist Goichi Hosoda and published in the late 1960s. It combines five calculations: the Tenkan sen (conversion line), Kijun sen (base line), Senkou Span A and Senkou Span B (which form the cloud), and the Chikou span (lagging line). The shaded region between the two Senkou spans is the kumo. The system is designed to convey trend direction, momentum, and support and resistance levels in a single glance, without requiring multiple separate indicators on the chart.
How traders use Ichimoku cloud
Retail traders typically read the cloud as a trend filter. When price trades above the kumo and the Tenkan sits above the Kijun, the desk treats conditions as structurally bullish; the reverse holds for bearish regimes. The thickness of the cloud reflects the spread between Senkou A and Senkou B and is used as a proxy for the strength of forward support or resistance. Institutional desks rarely use Ichimoku in isolation, but Japanese bank flow desks do reference Kijun crosses on daily USD/JPY and Nikkei charts, where the indicator has cultural and historical weight. Common applications include using the Kijun as a trailing reference, the Chikou span as a confirmation filter against past price, and cloud breaks as regime change signals on higher timeframes.
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Common misconceptions about the Ichimoku cloud
The most frequent error is treating Ichimoku as a single signal indicator. It is a system, and Hosoda intended all five lines to be read together, with the Chikou span confirming that current price is not entangled with prior structure. Another misconception is that the default settings of 9, 26, and 52 are arbitrary; they reflect the old Japanese six day trading week, so traders moving to 24/5 forex markets sometimes adjust to 10, 30, 60, though academic evidence for one setting over another is thin. Finally, the cloud is not predictive in itself, it simply projects the midpoint of past ranges forward.
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Frequently asked
What do the five lines of the Ichimoku cloud mean?
Tenkan sen is the nine period midpoint and acts as a fast signal line. Kijun sen is the 26 period midpoint and serves as a slower trend reference. Senkou Span A is the average of Tenkan and Kijun, plotted 26 periods ahead. Senkou Span B is the 52 period midpoint, also plotted 26 periods ahead. The Chikou span is the current close shifted 26 periods back, used to confirm signals against prior price.
Is the Ichimoku cloud reliable on forex pairs?
The cloud works on any liquid market because it is derived purely from price. On forex it is most commonly applied to USD/JPY, EUR/JPY and other yen crosses, partly because of its Japanese origin and partly because these pairs tend to produce sustained directional trends that suit the system. The desk treats it as a trend filter rather than a precise signal generator, and combines it with structural levels and macro context rather than trading crosses in isolation.
What timeframe is best for Ichimoku?
Hosoda designed Ichimoku for daily charts using end of day data, and the 26 period settings reflect that original intent. Many traders apply it to four hour and weekly charts with reasonable results, since the system relies on relative range midpoints rather than fixed time. On very low timeframes such as one minute or five minute charts, signal quality degrades because intrabar noise overwhelms the smoothing built into the calculations.
How is the kumo different from a moving average?
A moving average plots the mean of past closes at the current bar. The kumo plots the midpoint of past highs and lows, projected 26 periods into the future. This forward shift is the defining feature: it creates a visible zone of expected support or resistance ahead of price, allowing traders to see where the system anticipates structural friction before price arrives there. Moving averages offer no such forward projection.
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